Correction: The relationship of chemokine levels and the type of symptoms caused by NSAIDs or alcohol in patients with NSAIDs-exacerbated respiratory disease - Report - MDSpire

Correction: The relationship of chemokine levels and the type of symptoms caused by NSAIDs or alcohol in patients with NSAIDs-exacerbated respiratory disease

  • By

  • Karolina Frachowicz-Guerreiro

  • Adrian Gajewski

  • Maciej Chałubiński

  • Aleksandra Wardzyńska

  • June 17, 2026

  • 0 min

Share

Correction: Examining the association between chemokine concentrations and symptom types

Overview

This report corrects a figure in the original article regarding chemokine levels and symptoms induced by NSAIDs or alcohol in patients with NSAIDs-exacerbated respiratory disease. The correction does not alter the scientific conclusions of the study.

Background

NSAIDs are commonly used for pain management but can exacerbate respiratory conditions in some patients. Understanding the relationship between chemokine levels and symptom types is crucial for managing NSAID-exacerbated respiratory disease (N-ERD/AERD). Accurate data representation is essential for the interpretation of findings in clinical research.

Data Highlights

The correction pertains specifically to Figure 1, which was incorrectly published in the original article.

Key Findings

  • The correction does not affect the scientific conclusions of the original article.
  • Figure 1 illustrates the distribution of chemokine levels in relation to symptom types.
  • NSAIDs can induce varying symptoms based on individual chemokine profiles.
  • Understanding these associations can aid in better management of patients with N-ERD/AERD.

Clinical Implications

Clinicians should be aware of the corrected data representation when interpreting the relationship between chemokine levels and NSAID-induced symptoms. This understanding may inform treatment decisions for patients with NSAIDs-exacerbated respiratory conditions.

Conclusion

The correction of Figure 1 ensures accurate representation of the data without impacting the original study's conclusions.

Related Resources & Content

  1. Frachowicz-Guerreiro K, Gajewski A, Chałubiński M, Wardzyńska A, Front. Immunol, 2026 -- Correction: Examining the association between chemokine concentrations and symptom types induced by NSAIDs or alcohol
  2. Drug Safety — NSAID Use and Associated Upper Gastrointestinal Complications
  3. Drugs - Real World Outcomes — Association Between Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug Consumption and Acute Myocardial Infarction Risk in the General Population of Germany: A Nested Case-Control Analysis
  4. A two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis exploring the causal links among respiratory illnesses, the risk of gastric cancer, and Helicobacter pylori infection
  5. Frontiers in Medicine — Correction: Allergic rhinitis and nasal septum deviation in children: cause, consequence, or bidirectional relationship? Insights from the ARHINASD study
  6. Updating the classification and routine diagnosis of NSAID hypersensitivity reactions: A WAO Statement - ScienceDirect
  7. Allergology International 74 (2025) 51e65
  8. Reduced ALDH2 in the respiratory tract associates with dysregulated alcohol metabolism and respiratory reactions in AERD - PMC
  9. https://www.jiaci.org/revistas/doi10.18176_jiaci.1155.pdf

Original Source(s)

Related Content